President Hassan Rouhani yesterday emphasised the peaceful nature of the Islamic republic's atomic programme, telling the UN General Assembly that "nuclear weapons... Have no place in Iran's security and defence doctrine."
Israel scrambled to denounce the speech, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calling it "cynical" and "full of hypocrisy".
"This is exactly Iran's strategy -- to talk and play for time in order to advance its ability to achieve nuclear weapons. Rouhani knows this well," charged Netanyahu.
"For the past eight years, Israel's efforts to convince the world... To tackle Iran's nuclear designs head on relied on... Adamant, Holocaust-denying Ahmadinejad," commentator Chemi Shalevan wrote in Haaretz newspaper.
"Ahmadinejad... Served as Israel's number one talking point, its strategic propaganda asset, a poster boy who self-explained Tehran's sinister designs."
Rouhani's message is a "real diplomatic challenge for Israel," Professor Uzi Rabi, an Iran specialist at Tel Aviv University, told AFP.
Last year, Netanyahu stood before the UN General Assembly and drew a red line on a cartoonish depiction of a bomb, saying the international community must act to prevent Iran from using its nuclear programme to build a weapon, a charge accepted by the West but denied by Tehran.
This year, when he addresses the UN General Assembly on October 1, the Israeli leader will seek to play down the differences between Rouhani and his predecessor, the top-selling Yediot Aharonot daily said.
Rabi agreed: "Israel is trying to make sure everyone is keenly aware that the Iranian charm offensive is just tactics - it doesn't mean there's real change."
Israel's concerns over a thaw were further stoked on Monday when officials said US Secretary of State John Kerry would hold his first nuclear talks with Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif at a landmark meeting at the UN headquarters on September 26.
"Netanyahu... Is not going to be in the negotiations room so he's trying to remind the US of the reality that there's not been evidence of change," Dr Emily Landau of Tel Aviv University's Institute for National Security Studies told AFP.
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